Zombified Spider
Dreamer
While I completely agree with your point (I have Dyscalculia and ADHD) I think the point A.E. Lowen and others are trying to make is that Homosexuality and other aspects of characters often feel forced or slapped on there like they [the author] is just trying to make the book appeal to different demographics so they can make more money. I have friends who will read books just for the LGBTQIAP+ characters and then be disappointed when they are poorly written and just a money grab.I was intending to stay out of this discussion, but given that I'm so severely dyslexic that I qualify as disabled I'm going to shove my oar in. And in doing so I'm going to argue against A. E. Lowan, at least in part.
My view is that before we as authors even get to the question of whether a character needs to be a white CIS male or something else we need to think about the setting, and in particular we need to think about how society works in that setting.
In many ways, contemporary fantasy is the easy option. You can and should include all kinds of diverse characters, because modern society has become more accepting of them. That way we continue to build acceptance and self-esteem amongst all our readers. But what about other fantasy settings?
To take my dyslexia as an example. In a medieval style setting where there are few or no schools and only a very few can read and write well enough to teach their children and even fewer can afford tutors for their children there will be many people who cannot read and write. How would you ever know anything about dyslexia? Someone like me would be lost in the mass of people who are illiterate, we wouldn't be different or even be seen as different because no-one would ever think to ask why we couldn't read or write. In fact, being able to read and write would make you different...
Another example is homosexuality. How is this seen in your setting? It may be legal (or at least not illegal) but does that mean society accepts people like that? Is there a difference in attitudes between the (supposedly) sophisticated cities and the countryside? What impact does this have on our characters? Where do they meet others like them? Do they become open to blackmail? Don't get me wrong, I'm not arguing against including a character like that, but I do expect you the author to think it all the way through. Apart from anything else there are so many potential little plot hooks...
Different skin colour is yet another one. If your character has grown up a medieval style small town somewhere and never travelled far, how will they react when they get to some major trading port and see a person with a different skin colour? This person that they've just seen, how do they react to yet another country yokel staring at them? This coloured person, how are they treated in the port town, and is the way they're seen different from how they would be seen elsewhere in that same country? Here the plot possibilities start to pile up. People trying to con one another, subtle attempts at one uppmanship from both sides. And so on...
If you character sails to some new continent and goes ashore only to be met by a bunch of people with a different skin colour, what happens? Does your character survive the initial encounter or are they killed on the spot because the locals think they're some sort of monster? If they survive, how does our character react to being stared at by everyone? And so on...
To me, including diverse characters needs a lot of thought. Part of this is about setting and the societal norms in that setting. Thet other part is about characterisation and how these characters are as people. Based on how I sort that out I can then go on to work what impact this has on the plot and on character development. In my experience there is huge potential for some really complex characters and wonderfully intricate plots when I include diverse characters. But I have to think it through first, otherwise it's just tokenism.
Which leads me to my final comments. If you're writing contemporary fantasy you've got no excuse, so you'd better have a damn good reason for making a given character a white CIS male. But if you're writing fantasy set in another world then you'd better think through that setting in full before including a diverse character, because otherwise you may be creating a token representative character - and that is not what diversity and acceptance are about.
Sage
Istar
Myth Weaver